English
Etymology
From Middle English spynnestere (“woman who spins fibre”), from c. 1350; equivalent to spin + -ster. The semantic development is from a historical notion of unmarried women spinning thread for a living.
Pronunciation
Noun
spinster (plural spinsters)
- (sometimes derogatory) A woman who has never been married, especially one past the typical marrying age according to social traditions.
- Synonym: old maid
1628–1644, Edw[ard] Coke, (please specify |part=1 to 4), London:If […] a woman be named spinster, she may abate […] the same [writ].
- One who spins (puts a spin on) a political media story so as to give something a favorable or advantageous appearance; a spin doctor, spin merchant or spinmeister.
- (obsolete) Someone whose occupation was spinning thread.
c. 1601–1602 (date written), William Shakespeare, “Twelfe Night, or What You Will”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act II, scene iv]:The spinsters and the knitters in the sun.
- (obsolete) A woman of evil life and character; so called from being forced to spin in a house of correction.
- (rare, dialectal) A spider; an insect (such as a silkworm) which spins thread.
Translations
unmarried woman
- Afrikaans: oujongnooi
- Arabic: عَانِس f (ʕānis)
- Armenian: please add this translation if you can
- Bashkir: ҡарт ҡыҙ (qart qıź)
- Basque: neskazahar (eu)
- Belarusian: стара́я дзе́ва f (starája dzjéva)
- Bulgarian: ста́ра мо́ма f (stára móma)
- Catalan: conca (ca) f
- Chechen: ойна (ojna)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 老處女 / 老处女 (zh) (lǎochǔnǚ), 剩女 (zh) (shèngnǚ)
- Czech: stará panna f
- Danish: pebermø c
- Dutch: oude vrijster f, ongehuwde vrouw f
- Estonian: vanatüdruk
- Finnish: vanhapiika (fi)
- French: vieille fille (fr) f
- Galician: poula f, solteirona f
- German: alte Jungfer f, Junggesellin (de) f, unverheiratete Frau f, älteres Fräulein f
- Greek: γεροντοκόρη (el) f (gerontokóri)
- Hungarian: vénkisasszony (hu), aggszűz (hu), vénlány (hu)
- Ido: damzelo (io)
- Ingrian: vanhatyttö
- Irish: bean shingil f, puisbhean f (aging spinster)
- Italian: zitella (it) f
- Japanese: オールドミス (ja) (ōrudo misu) ("old miss"), 売れ残り (ja) (うれのこり, urenokori), ハイミス (haimisu)
- Kazakh: кәріқыз (kärıqyz)
- Korean: 올드 미스 (oldeu miseu), 노처녀(老處女) (nocheonyeo), 로처녀(老處女) (rocheonyeo) (North Korea)
- Lao: ນາງສາວແກ່ (nāng sāo kǣ)
- Lithuanian: senmergė f
- Lü: ᦉᦱᧁᦏᧁᧉ (ṡaawṫhaw²)
- Macedonian: стара мома f (stara moma)
- Manx: ben sneeuee f
- Maori: wahine takakau, takakau, wahine taumaro, maro kau, marokore, wahine kiritapu
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: attergløyme m or f, peppermø (no) m or f, peppermøy m or f
- Nynorsk: attergløyme f, peparmøy f
- Polish: stara panna (pl) f
- Portuguese: solteira (pt) f, solteirona (pt) f, encalhada f
- Romanian: fată bătrână (ro) f
- Russian: ста́рая де́ва (ru) f (stáraja déva), векову́ха (ru) f (vekovúxa)
- Scottish Gaelic: seana-mhaighdeann f
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: бабадевојка f, бабадјевојка f, усѝделица f, усѝдјелица f
- Roman: babadevojka (sh) f, babadjevojka f, usìdelica f, usìdjelica (sh) f
- Shan: သၢဝ်ၵႄႇ (shn) (sǎao kàae)
- Sicilian: schetta f
- Slovak: stará panna f
- Slovene: stara devica f
- Sotho: lefetwa
- Spanish: solterona (es) f, quedada (es) f
- Swedish: ungmö (sv) c, fröken (sv) c
- Tagalog: pindangga (old maid)
- Thai: เทื้อ (tʉ́ʉa), ทึนทึก, สาวทึนทึก, สาวแก่
- Turkish: kalmış (tr)
- Ukrainian: стара́ ді́ва f (stará díva)
- Vietnamese: bà cô già
- Welsh: hen ferch f
|
one who spins a political media story
See also
Further reading
Anagrams
Dutch
Etymology
From spinnen (“to spin”) + -ster.
Pronunciation
Noun
spinster f (plural spinsters, diminutive spinstertje n, masculine spinner)
- spinner (female)